The Newnan news. (Newnan, Ga.) 1906-1915, August 03, 1906, Image 6

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VI .1 state he Return of W. J. Bryan. Flit: News is very u! id to it Hon. Joseph M Terrell lor of Georgia, .mil lion. >umans, chairman ol the imocatic executive c mimittee this state, and other prominent ,wl leading I Jem nrrats, have been ■rdially invited to attend the re* •ption that will h- tendered in ew Yoik to the Honorable Wi am Jennings Hryan, of the state t Nebraska, upon Mr. Brvan’s re irn from his extensive trip around le world. Mr. Ilryan was the Democratic Meier and standard bearer in two ampaigns, and h be world today rti i/.er ;v.i ; appreci ates its value When in our hearts the tide is low, mil understands the proportion to When biackened reefs of old do use N'.i longer is he satisfied with spur the light so itching, one-horscj Rise to our view, we need not omn-madc ol nv, but he must cart; have the b* st the skilled mechanic The tide returns; at morn we go can pioduce. Instead of keeping mu. tiie i lick-headed Hill on the tarni and encouraging the smart, active Sim to try the city life, he has learned the the best brain is most needed on trie farm. Now and then you tirid a his- satisfi .d farmer, hut it is always one who hasn’t understood the les sons nature is teaching—one who has expected to reap where he has not sown Such a one is quickly stands before led astray by the finning adver- one of the tisements of the great railway sys- To sunlit seas and fair. skies more —Totter. ;reatest statesmen since the days terns of the northwest which are >t Washington and Jefferson. ever flooding tin* mails with man- He is deserving of a reception uals setting I u'h the bea itjes and rational in character and cordial virtues of this and that region,each n enthusiasm. claiming a par excellence the home Mr. Bryan .stands foremost seeker’s paradise, among Demoeiats of today, and he A few yeats ago these enterpris has only one rival fm the Demo cratic nomination in the next cam- p.ugn. That one rival, tin* Honorable William Randolph llcaist, of tin- state ol New York, has declared in favor of M-. Bryan for the nomination, and has stated that lie will cordially support the Nebras kan it be is again made a leat er of the Democratic party. It would seem at the present mg institutions threw out the al luring bait of gold! gold! gold! Gold everywhere, and the man with the pick and pan was the typical person- gc of the northwest. In latter days these tilings, too, lave changed. Agriculture has in this aspect taken tin* place of min ing. In former tun s the “new country" that off •ml the most .it tractions to settlers from a distnrec was that in which gold w is taken time that Mr. Bryan is the logical out of the ground in b g yellow and inevitable candidate of the nuggets or mfini esmal dust; u* Democrats for 1908, hut politics these latter days the scatch is Mil’ are uncertain and there is a pos- for a quick fortune, hut the m n- sihility that political exigencies mm exploited is the growing rr !•, may yet torn the hosts of Demo- j which can lie turned into gold b ; Crntic leaders to the state of New th<* slower process of planting, York for their candidate for the cultivating and harvesting, The m xt campaign, in which ease Mr. pioneer now has Inr Ins emblems Hearst stands preeminently as tho the sulky plow and the reaping most available man lor the nomi nation. This fact will bo doubly impor tant in the event that .Mr. lie.list Wednesday.—He gave to the sea His decree that the waters should not lass His command ment I’rov. 8:29. Upon the sand down at old ocean’s teet I lie and watch the waves break on the shore. What is the wisdom in the sea’s dull roar That gives the heart a patience • calm and sweet? I cannot tell. I only know my soul When it is racked by doubt, op pressed by sin. Rinds a strange comfort where white waves curl in; My feeble hopes, like them, shall find their goal. —Denison. Thursday.—Who shut up the sea with doors and said hitherto slialt thou come hut no further: and here shall thv proud waves he -tay. d. Job 38:8, l I. .\|one I walked the ocean strand, A pe arly shell was in my hand, I stooped and wrote upon the sand My name, the year, the day. A onward trom the spot I massed, < > e lingering look behind I cast, \ wave came rolling hieh and last, And washed my lines awav. —Gould, Friday.—He shall have domin ion also from sea to sea.—Ts. 72:8. And yet, with Him who counts the sands And holds the waters in His hands, AD > c t*-\ 1 v m mil IlT; pe ■ - ’ l F M g': To sweeten, To refresh, To cleanse the system, Effectually and Gently; There is only one Genuine Syrup of Figs; to get its bene ficial effects Dispels colds and headaches when bilious or con stipated; For men, women and children; Acts best, on the kidneys and liver, stomach and bowels; Always buy the genuine — Manufactured by the fit IF51 Louisville, Ky. Smv francisco. Cal. flewYork.A.Y. The genuine Syrup of Figs is for sale by all first-class druggists. The full name of the company—California Fig Syrup Co. — is always printed on the front of every package. Price Fifty Cents per bottle. machines, instead of the miners' kit. Now, the advertisements teem with beautiful illustrations which show the settler's comfortable coi ls elected gov. rnor of the state of t.age and happy family, projected { know a lasting record stands, New York at the approaching No- j against fi.-Uls of heavy headed lnscribed against my name, vember election. gram, trees from which you al- 0f al t lhjs morla i part has wrought, It looks now as if he will be, in most hear the groaning under ap- ()f a ) t , ljs tb j nkm g sm ,| has fact, the next governor of the Kin- pies and peaches as large as water thoii'dit pire State, and if he carries New melons, and the cattle of * 1 Alldfrom these fleeting moments caught For glory or for shame, New melons, and the cattle ( f a thous- York over the Republicans by any ' and hills grouped in pens beside unusual majority and redeems the [ the railroad, awaiting transporta- state from the Republican misrule, I lion to the markets where buyers there is 110 question that Mr. are running over each other to get Hearst will again become a proini- 0 cn.mce to give a big, fat check nent presidential possibility, 1 for them. His election as governor of New I Think on these tilings, young York will force him before the | men of tho South, and determine country and his availabilty will he to stay here in the greatest agri so pronounced that it is just pos-! cultural country of the world- sihle that the Democrats of the | turn him who would tempt you to entire east will insist on Mr.! leave behind your back.—Kx. Hearst as a party standard-bearer. All of this is, of course, in the future, and even Mr. Bryan has tie dared emphatically that it is yet too early to decide the issues and the candidate of the Democracy for the next campaign. Hut it is not too early to tender a rousing reception and a patriotic greeting to William Jennings Bry an upon his return from abroad. The News hopes that Governoi Terrell, Chairman Youmans and many other distinguished Demo crats and public men of Georgia will attend the Bryan reception in j New York. Let Georgia he well and ably From Old St. Simon’s Sea-girt Shore. iOOl) CALENDAR I'OR REST. A WEEK OR Monday—Shall we encamp by the sea. Ex. 14:2 Men gain new vigor at her whole some breast; She links far lands and reunites fond hearts; She carries argosies trom east and west | to those of distant parts. But more than this her mission -Gould. Saturday.—He inaketh the storm a calm, so that the waves \ thereof are still. Then are they glad because they he quiet; so Hej bringeth them unto their desired haven. Ps 107. I low calm, how beautiful comeson i The stilly hours when storms are gone, And warring winds have died away, And clouds beneath the glancing ray Melt off and leave the land and sea Sleeping in bright tranquility. —Moore. from the storm. Isa represented on this occasion, for ii will no doubt he an event of great 1 political and historic interest.— j Atlanta News. Stay on the Farm. There was once a lime when the farmer was j-aiTfied to scratch the surface or the earth and let nature do the rest; when the value of fer tilizers was so little appreciated, because unknown, that a handful here and there was thought abund ant, when the merest makeshift of an implement was considered as good as needed; when the bright est mind and most energetic youth was thought better fitted for any other ealling than that of farming. But these conditions have under gone quite as radical a change as the business methods of counting house or factory. The modern farmer realizes that he must pre pare his land scientifically and the gang-plow is taking the place of And ere the dawn will safely glid« the pony turner. The farmer ol j To the broad bosom ot the deep, today knows the composition of, Beyond the surf s unceasing chide unto us, The mission of the many-voiced sea! She rolls her ceasless waves to shore, and thus She types eternity. —R E. Burton. The Lord on high is mightie than the mighty waves of the sea. Ps. 93M* Tuesday —And overtook them camping by the sea. Ex. 14:9. The tide slips from the harbor's mouth, The rugged reefs stretch far away, The tangled grasses lightly sway And a faint odor of the south Comes stealing in across the bay. The ships, like phantoms, lie asleep; They wait the turning of the tide, A refuge 25:4. Sunday. — And there was no more sea. Rev. 21:1. And there it breathed its sorrow to mine ear Upon that lonely shore; It told me how its billows were to be As things forgotten in eternity; While I should ever live That great and restless deep should be no more. —Temple N. L. C. New nan, Ga LACE BARK TREES. flu* Ili-nuf iful mill .St»rvl<*(*nlile Di-on» Malcrlul* They 'i lclil. There are hi nil about hall' 11 (b";*ii j luce hark trees in the \v eld. s.i culled j hecini-e the inner hark yields a naia. -il men m rendy nmile sheet form, widen can Is* mr.de up in serviceable art Ides of uppurel. Only four of those curious species of trees are of much practical value. Tourists who have stopped at Hawaii or Samoa may recall the luce hark ebbing of tho native., eiothlnu of a neat brown color when new. of re markable HtreiiRth and of a fragrant odor, like freshly cured tobacco leaf. The mi'Ivo lapa cloth, as It is called, ts made from the hark of the Bniso- netlu pnpirll’erii, hut It Is not usually Included a mom; the real lace hark trees. In Its natural stall* the real lace hark Is of a delicate cream white tint. It is probably a kind of dhrmis pith. When the outer bark Is removed it can be unfolded and unwound in one seam less piece, having a surface of a little more than a square yard. Washing and sun bleaching give it a dazzling white appearance. The fabric Is airily light. It is used in the West Dulles for mantillas, cravats, collars, window cur tains—In a word, for every purpose that ordinary lace Is used. In making lip shawls, veils nud the like it Is cus tomary to piece two sheets of lace hark together. Delicate and apparently weak ns it Is 111 single mesh, u hit .of lace Imrk If rolled Into a thin string will all hut resist human strength to break It.—New York World. Have your mules ami horses in sured in tiie Mutual Life Stock In surance Company of Georgia. Full face value of all policies will be paid. For information and terms, call on or write to J. W. Will- coxon, agent for Coweta and Car- roll counties, Newnan. Ga. tf The man of pluck never trusts to luck. For anything in music or musi cal instruments telephone No. 196. Buy your sidewalk tile from the Newnan Tile Works. tf Money to loan ou real estate pt 7 per oeut. Apply to L. M. Farmer. Our place is headquarters for fine stationery, postcards, etc. See us.—Penis ton & Lee. “Where the Treasure In,” Etc. “Harold,” said the heiress, "1 have 1 been thluklug.” "Thinking of me, precious?” asked Harold. "Indirectly, yes. I have been think ing that were you to marry me every body would say you only did so in or der to get my money.” "What care I for the unthinking world ?” “But, oh, Harold, I will marry you!" "My own dur"— "And I will not have people say un kind things about you, so 1 have ar ranged to give ull my fortune to the missionaries. Why, Harold, where are you going?” Harold paused long enough ou his way to the door to look hack and mut ter, "I'm going to he a missionary'.”— Judge. Hard Lack. Caller—I have here several hills which are long overdue. Harduppe (desper ately)—I am sorry to say that our cash ier is out today. Caller—OU. well. It doesn't make much difference. I’ll call and pay them at some future date. Good day, sir. HIb Beat Bedroom. An American physician says that while In England he saw a vaulted tomb In a London cemetery which had the following Inscription engraved on the door: Dr. John Gardner's Last and Best Bed room. Crushed! i A Crushing Reduction Sale, destroying all profits and much of the adtual co^t of over $10,- 000 worth of seasonable mer chandise for men, women and children, commenced July 28, And Lasts for Ten Days at the New York Bargain Store. This outrageous destruction of regular prices for ten days, by the New York Bargain Store, will not only crush competi tion and bring hundreds of people to Newnan, but accom plish another and more im portant mission. The New York Bargain House is badly over stocked, having on hand more goods than they ought to carry, more than they can af ford to carry. We must have the cash. This means the moSt outrageous slaughter of Men’s and Women’s Dry Goods, Shoes, etc., that mortal man or woman has ever wit nessed. All Goods Marked Down in Plain Figures. NEW YORK BARGAIN STORE The Lid Off. Johnnie—Say. pa. who was Pandora? Johnnie's Pa—Pandora, my son, was a little girl who started a lot of trouble because she didn't keep the lid down.— Princeton Tiger. There Is certainly something of ex quisite kindness and thoughtful be nevolence In that rarest of gifts, fine breeding.—Bulwer. The foolish man syndicates his troubles and dissipates his joys. Early to b^d and early to rise won’t help you a bit if you don’t I advertise. Speaking of confiding natures— ; how about those people who put ! their trust in the labels on the ra n It is easy to rind excuses for those we love. The trouble about a bad habit '.ha: v°u can quit if vou want to is that when you want to you can’t. The real turning point in a boy’s career is when he first realizes the necessity of forgetting a lot of things he thinks he knows.